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ATTENTION: Diversity, religion, legal, international and minority affairs reporters and editors |
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WHAT
"Deconstructing
Islamophobia," a two-day conference at the University of California,
Berkeley. A wide-ranging lineup of scholars will discuss the rising
local, national and global fear of and prejudice against the religion
of Islam and of Muslims, as evidenced by actions including the
curtailment of civil rights in the name of post-9/11 national security.
Panel
topics will include "'Good' and 'Bad' Muslims: Youth Citizenship and
Dissent in the U.S. Empire;" "The Wall Street Journal's Muslims:
Representing Islam in American Print News Media;" "Islamophobia and
Anti-Blackness: A Genealogical Approach;" "Islamophobia, Jewish
Intellectuals and the Question of Arab Jews;" and "Do U.S. Policies
Fuel Islamphobia?"
The conference is being sponsored by UC Berkeley's Center for Race and Gender.
WHEN
Friday,
April 25, from 8:30 a.m. to 6:15 p.m. and Saturday, April 26, from 10
a.m. to 5:45 p.m. A community discussion on the topic will be held
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at Wheeler Auditorium.
WHERE
Lipman Room, 8th floor, Barrows Hall. For further information, see UC Berkeley's campus map.
WHO
In
addition to UC Berkeley scholars Ula Taylor, Nelson Maldonado-Torres,
Hamid Algar, Ramon Grosfoguel and Evelyn Nakano Glenn and experts from
the UC campuses of Davis, Irvine, Santa Barbara and San Diego,
panelists will hail from San Francisco State University, Marquette
University, New York University, Wesleyan University, National
University of Mexico, Macalester College, University of Leeds and
University of Bristol (U.K.), University of Massachusetts, California
Institute of Integral Studies, the Council on American-Islamic
Relations, and the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley.
Note: To read more about this and other UC Berkeley news, visit the Berkeley News Center at: http://newscenter.berkeley.edu.

